Babies were born to be breastfed
Breastfeeding is the most natural way to feed a baby. No other method of feeding is as healthy for your baby as breastfeeding. These benefits begin the minute the infant is born and may last for a lifetime.
Breastfeeding can also benefit the environment.
Benefits for the
Environment
Benefits for the Child
Benefits for the Mother
Peer Counseling Program
Returning to Work
Kentucky Law Now Protects Nursing Moms
Breastfeeding is Cost Effective
Local Support for Breastfeeding
Additional Facts
Breast pump
recall information
More Information
Research shows that breastfeeding and breast milk are important for
the environment, the infant, the mother and society.
Benefits
for the Environment
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Breast milk is a natural and renewable
resource that causes no environmental harm
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Mother's milk is not an industrially
manufactured product--no wastes are generated to pollute air, water, soils
or oceans
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Breast milk needs no packaging--no resources
are needed to make all of the cans, labels, packets, boxes and plastic wraps
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Breast milk needs no fuel for preparation.
No wood, gas or electricity is needed, so no greenhouse gasses or air
pollutants are released
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Breast milk uses no water for preparation or
clean-up
Benefits for the Child
Children who are breastfed receive many health benefits, including:
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Lower rates of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)
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Fewer illnesses like diarrhea, ear infections, colds, meningitis
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Higher scores on intelligence and vision tests
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Fewer cases of some kinds of cancer, like Hodgkin’s disease, childhood leukemia
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Lower risk of childhood onset diabetes
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Protection against asthma and eczema (a type of skin irritation)
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Lower risk of obesity
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Have fewer cavities and are less likely to require braces
Benefits for the Mother
The
United States has one of the lowest rates of breastfeeding in the world. While many new mothers start out breastfeeding, more than half stop shortly after the baby is born. Babies aren’t the only ones that benefit from breastfeeding, though. It also has advantages for new moms. Breastfeeding may:
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Help moms return to pre-pregnancy weight faster
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Decrease risk anemia and excessive bleeding after birth
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Help moms miss fewer days at work
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Decrease risk of breast and ovarian cancer
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Reduce risk of osteoporosis
Peer Counseling Program
A breastfeeding peer counseling program in Northern
Kentucky is designed to encourage breastfeeding and assist mothers needing
advice and guidance. It is provided by the Health Department and is open to any
mother enrolled in the
WIC (Women, Infants and Children) nutrition supplement
program and who plans to breastfeed her child.
There are four peer counselors in Northern Kentucky, one for
each county the Health Department serves: Boone, Campbell, Grant and Kenton. The
peer counselors are all moms who have breastfed successfully and have
participated in the WIC program.
The peer counseling program is designed to provide
support anytime a new mother needs it. The peer counselors are available anytime
by cell phone and usually work from home answering questions and giving advice
to mothers.
For more information on the peer counseling program, please
contact Cathy Winston at 859.363.2112.
Returning to Work
As part of the March 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (commonly
known as health care reform), federal law protects breastfeeding mothers.
Nursing mothers who work for a company with more than 50 employees are now
entitled to the following: reasonable break time to be express milk (can be
unpaid), and employers must create or designate a lactation area--other than a
bathroom--that is private.
Kentucky Law Now Protects Nursing Moms Even with all of these benefits, many new mothers may hesitate to breastfeed because of the unwanted attention they might receive from others while breastfeeding in public places.
Kentucky law guarantees that cities, counties and public places don’t ban public breastfeeding. The law prevents breastfeeding in public from being considered an act of public indecency. It also forbids any city or person from restricting a mother from breastfeeding in a location where she is otherwise allowed to be.
Kentucky is one of at least 35 states with a law protecting public breastfeeding.
Breastfeeding is Cost Effective Our society can greatly benefit from increased breastfeeding. The estimated cost of feeding a baby formula rather than breastfeeding is approximately $1,300 per year; that’s four times what it costs to breastfeed. The nutrients in breast milk may keep children from getting sick as often, therefore reducing the number of days off work parents would take to care for their children. Breastfeeding cuts down on the need for costly health services paid for by insurers, government agencies or families. It’s also more cost effective and better for the environment. It requires no electricity or fuel for its production or packing, thus making it more cost-effective and environmentally friendly.
Local Support for Breastfeeding The U.S. Surgeon General’s goal is that by 2010, 75 percent of women will breastfeed their babies at birth, 50 percent at six months and 25 percent at 1 year of age. To meet these goals, the Health Department and WIC Program offer breastfeeding classes, breastfeeding support calls, breast pumps and lactation counselors at each of its four county health centers. The Health Department also has an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant on staff coordinating breastfeeding promotion activities.
Now that you know some of the life-saving benefits of breastfeeding, encourage someone you love to do so and congratulate the ones who already have!
Additional facts
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Breast Milk Facts |
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Breast milk is one of a kind. It:
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Contains a perfect balance of nutrients that the infant can easily digest
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Changes over time, even over the course of a day, to meet the changing needs of the growing child
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Contains substances that aid in the development of the infant’s brain and stomach
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Prevents the baby from developing certain allergies or getting sick
Source: United States Breastfeeding Committee: “Benefits of breastfeeding.”
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Economic Facts |
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Economic facts related to breastfeeding in the United States include:
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Families spend $2 billion a year on breast milk substitutes such as infant formula
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Insurers, including Medicaid, spend more than $1.3 billion per year to treat the three most common illnesses in children—colds, ear infections and diarrhea—in the first year of life for formula-fed infants versus breastfed infants.
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$3.6 to $7 billion is spent every year on conditions and diseases that are preventable by breastfeeding
Source: United States Breastfeeding Committee. “Benefits of breastfeeding."
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Breast Pump Recall Information
Medela, Inc. is
initiating a safety notification on the power adaptor (also referred to as the
transformer) used with the Pump In StyleŽ Advanced family of breast pumps. These
breast pumps are used by some of the Health Department's clients. For more
information on this recall,
click here.
More Information For more information on breastfeeding, please visit:
LaLache League International
Womenshealth.gov: The National Women's Health Information Center
United States Breastfeeding Committee
International Lactation Consultant Association
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Breastfeeding
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